A woman almost died after suffering a rare bowel condition, which led her to enter the toilet more than 50 times a day, causing her to lose about 25 kg of weight in 10 weeks.


According to the British "Mirror" website, Trudy Stonard, 37, from Walsall, West Midlands, England, was "" fortunate to survive "after being diagnosed with ulcerative colitis, a condition that causes colitis and rectum.


In just 10 weeks, her condition developed into a "life threatening", and surgeons spent 6 hours removing her severely inflamed intestine.


Stonard, a mother of two, began to suffer from severe stomach pain with frequent toilet entry in December 2014. She even had pain when eating a box of potato chips.


Her condition was incorrectly diagnosed with Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS), but Trudy feared that her condition would be more serious, when she saw blood being excreted in her stools after eating "KFC Food".


Trudy lost a lot of weight, moving from about 58 kg to about 31 kg, and her son Leonard, now 7 years old, was reported to have refused to approach her because she seemed "unrecognizable." She continued to lose weight, and was entering the toilet more than 50 times a day, according to "Mirror."


"One day I went to the bathroom about 53 times in a day," said Trudy. "The doctors tried to take a sample of stool, but the bed sheet looked like someone had poured a pint of blood on it. I felt bad, and I could barely get up from the bed."


Trudy was sent more tests over a two-week period, including colposcopy - which included inserting a camera through the colon.


She said that doctors found the lining of the intestine "covered with ulcers", and was finally diagnosed with ulcerative colitis.


She underwent surgery to remove a portion of the colon and replace it with a stoma sac (to collect litter), at New Cross Hospital, Wolverhampton, in February 2015.


Trudy was told that it would be difficult to get pregnant because of the damage she had suffered. Nevertheless, Trudi managed to "miraculously" get pregnant and learned to stoma.